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Post Digital Marketing 2009

This last year has seen logarithmic changes in marketing, fueled by different concepts like Utilities, AR, The Collective Exchange of Ideas, Transmedia, Digital becoming ubiquitous, Mobility and more.

I have tried to be a part of some of these discussions online, and have as a result of other peoples shared and collective wisdom published a range of posts, presentations and tweets on the subject.

What I wanted to do before leaving on a short summer vacation was recombine all the best ideas, into ONE Post Digital Marketing 2009 presentation. Summarizing all the major thoughts finding its way to my “ideas”-folder this last year.

View presentation below or here.

View more presentations from Helge Tennø.

Hopefully it will both be interesting and inspiring to some, and the format introduce what Erin McKean defines as Serendipity:

    “Finding something you weren’t looking for because finding what you are looking for is so damn difficult.”
    - link

Please enjoy, and have a nice summer (winter).

Best Regards
Helge

A subject gets bigger, not smaller

We seem to be looking for universal principles, when we should be looking for fragmentation.

It’s quite common when trying to understand something that we try to simplify it, searching for consistencies and core principals. The problem is when we apply the find to other stuff as well as a universal principal for everything similar.

Even though universal laws or guidelines might seem like a good idea, it is often the complete opposite of something useful.

    Take the Music Industry as an example. These days they are trying to find the ONE law to rule them all, to solve the problem for both universal, international, national or independent artists and bands – but is there ONE undiscovered answer? Or should there be many?

As we become more insightful and smarter regarding a subject, our articulation of it increases which leads us to discover details that we didn’t know existed to begin with. As a subject gets bigger we also find minute differences and details that make what seemed similar quite opposite.

Ignoring the nuances and fragmentation’s inside a subject as we try to make our ideas accessible to other people through graphs and sound bites :o), makes it easier to get understood, but demands the reader to ask more questions. (which is a good thing)

I hope the people reading this blog understand that I’m not trying to find universal answers. I’m exploring a landscape, square inch by square inch. And one answer might be a good solution to one problem, but might not give a full and complete answer to a lot of other stuff, or even be downright terrible.

Malcolm Gladwell inspired me to start thinking of this whole thing as a giant puzzle:

    “We are all collecting small pieces of the same puzzle. One day maybe we’ll get so far that it starts making sense.”

Digital didn’t change anything, but everything digital changed.

The first ten years of digital was (to a large extent) the same siloed ideas that we’d already been exploiting for decades on other content and messaging transportation infrastructures (media). It was a carbon copy.

It is only in the last 2-4 years something interesting and revolutionary has surfaced through the emergence of social media (the collective exchange of ideas) and digital utilities.

This creates a new currency for marketing online, not replacing traditional advertising / messaging but competing for the same budget and offering a completely different set of returns.

Since posting this presentation two days ago, I’ve added some ideas to it, relating to Time and Direct Relationships.

Apologies for re-posting, but this is the conclusion to my series on the new currency online, with special focus on opportunities for media companies.

Find the Slideshow below, or here.
(If you have already seen the first version the second one might not cache, there should be a yellow ribbon in the upper left corner if you are watching the updated version).

The New Brand landscape 2

A lot of intense activity the last couple of weeks, with presentations and alterations has produced a new updated edition of the presentation The New Brand Landscape.

A lot of old stuff for old readers, but hopefully I’ve managed to add some fresh stuff. For new readers who might not have seen the first edition this hopefully will present some valuable and inspiring thoughts.

The New Brand Landscape 2 tries to explain some of the most important changes in digital media, it’s effects and the new opportunities for marketers.

View more presentations from helgetenno.

The New Mindset

We are as marketers and digital strategists to focused on the tools and arenas we want to be “on” rater than our job; to connect consumers and participants to the brand.

Marketing and brand building is not about being “on” anything. It’s about uniquely communicating our ideas to the customer in a situation where your brand is given the opportunity to mean something with the result of establishing a relationship with the participant.

itsnotaboutbeingonanything

We need to approach digital marketing value first. Not selecting platforms first, and then try to uncover value through a clever choice of strategy.

In order for us to understand the New Brand Landscape we HAVE TO deconstruct our linear models for distributing content, take one step back, and start understanding how and WHERE people connect to our brand, and then start putting the pieces together in the right order – if there is any order at all?

deconstructlinearmodels

I attended a brilliant talk Thursday by Jess Greenwood, Deputy Editor at Contagious Magazine. The talk ran through a range of ideas and exemplified them with campaigns, many represented in Most Contagious 2008, and all exploring the new digital landscape. But after seeing all this, we are stuck with wondering how and why do I get there? How do I come up with these great ideas, and not limit myself to the regular receipt:

    Old model: Campaign site + banners + Facebook + mobile + large amounts of expensive media = Great Success

    as compared to the

    New model: value + situation + incentive + existing landscape = arena
    (although it’s not linear like this)

newmodelmindset

Understanding the New Mindset:

    1. Brand building is about communicating a unique value with the goal of connecting to people, resulting in extended loyalty and preference.

    Communicating value is THE purpose of a value driven company, not banners, display ads, Facebook or blogging. The tools are not the goal, the purpose is. And the purpose is: Value, communication, loyalty and preference.

    2. People only care about brands in situations where they are relevant. If I’m baking a cake, I don’t care about Nike, but if I’m exercising, Nike is everything.

    This gives that brands need to focus on identifying the situation in which they mean something – the situations are the only events where customers would give a damn, and they are the arenas where the competition between brands occur.

    3. Identify your value in the situation where you are important, it’s still not about your product, it’s about identity. Whirpool figured out that no one would hang around talking about dishwashers for weeks on end, and created The American Family Podcast, where Whirpool talks about the Family – for the 264 episodes. Beat that!

    4. Figure out how to become accessible. How do participants and customers get a hold of you when they care.

    This is where many brands fail, choosing only to be accessible online, via the laptop’s browser, when the customer is at home, after putting his children to sleep. Brands need to shed the notion of having an appearance, and start thinking about accessibility.

    5. Landscape. What your competitors are doing are just as important to you as your own activities.

    First of all “you can’t out-amazon amazon”; unimaginatively trying to challenge a market leader at their own game has failed many. Secondly, as Dove has demonstrated when developing their Real Beauty campaign, a result of admitting that their old adverts where so similar to their competition that changing the product shot inside an ad with a competitors product, made the ad seem for them, rather than Dove. And thirdly, if everyone else is doing it already, it’s probably easier to win by creating a new idea. In the food world everyone wants to become an online distributor of receipts, but there seems to be little understanding that many food brands are not about food, (like Whirpool being about the family, not cleanliness or appliances)?

    So the golden rule of the new marketing landscape would be, given that the uniqueness of communicating your values will be as important as the values themselves: Build your own game.

    6. Small successes, it’s all about moving your competitor through the snakes and ladders game board, every step is a success. Make sure you build and measure for all the small steps, with your eye on the final price.

Should we be in the business of filtering information, or creating less?

In one more of his excellent posts concerning the content of the Internet, the publishing industry and the influx of enormous amounts of information due to tools simplifying publishing Scott Carp of Publishing 2.0 comes up with this beautiful quote:

“But is shoveling as much content as possible onto the web really the best way to create enduring value?”
- Scott Carp

Excellent. Read the rest of the post here…

Writing it for everybody

Just picked up this Quote from an interview with Richard Branson on AdPulp:

“Strangely, I think my dyslexia has helped. When I launch a new company, I need to understand the advertising. If I can understand it, then I believe anybody can. Virgin speaks in normal language instead of using phrases that nobody understands, like “financial-service industry.

Working a lot with large websites I know how easily one can write words and use terminolgy that nobody understands, not even the writer herself a few minutes after she wrote it.

Finding a person with reading difficulties or testing the copy on people with difficulties might be an excellent way to find those god arguments for why the text should do one more spin in the washer before it gets published.

words

Authentic and humoristic copywriting

It’s almost become a standard that web2.0 startups or internet service companies ad a personal tone on their descriptive texts around their website/application. This has won (i’m guessing) thousands of positive remarks and blogposts.

ÅsnesIs this going to be the standard on other kinds of webpages as well, or are traditional companies taking themselves to seriously?

An example from the Norwegian ski producer Åsnes site (thx Bjørn for the link) shows that it is not unlikely that this will take on a wider appeal:

“For dei som ikkje skal ha joggepinnar, er dette lette turski med stålkant slik at ein kjem seg ned att på skapeleg vis, utan å bli heilt skjelven i beina. Ein må stadig minna Nordmenn på at me ikkje bur i Danmark. Går du oppoverbakke så må det gå ned att ein gong!”

(it dowsn’t translate very well, but it’s funny :o)

Both Jacki Huba, Ben McConnell and Barry Schwartz are talking a lot about authenticity and the positive effects this has on consumers seeking non authorative companies to admire and fall in love with (or just purchase from and recommend to others. Authentic text tells stories people relate to way more than text optimized for selling. And if you can do it with a smile as well people will be more open to being persuaded.

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Presentations

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